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Media and social licence: on being publicly useful in Tasmanian forests conflict

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 17:30 authored by Elizabeth Lester
This article analyses the role of media in the representation and circulation of the term ‘social licence’ within public debate. It does so in the context of an increasingly global political economy of forests, growing public interest in resource procurement and environmental sustainability, and new forms of mediatized environmental conflict that carry volatile notions of ‘the affected’. Drawing on a longitudinal study of the three-decade-long conflict over forests and forestry in the Australia’s southern island state of Tasmania, this research outlines the emergence, embedding and decline of the term ‘social licence’ in national and local media coverage. The article argues that the term’s openness and strategic deployment by stakeholders in news media exposes industries, markets and communities to continuing conflict, while making the term a site for conflict itself. The article concludes by asking how – within the context of expanding international markets and complex supply chains, and sophisticated use of media by campaigners, corporations and governments – ‘social licence’ can be a publicly useful concept.

Funding

Australian Research Council

History

Publication title

Forestry

Volume

89

Issue

5

Pagination

542-551

ISSN

0015-752X

Department/School

School of Social Sciences

Publisher

Oxford Univ Press

Place of publication

Great Clarendon St, Oxford, England, Ox2 6Dp

Rights statement

Copyright 2016 Institute of Chartered Foresters. This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Forestry: An International Journal of Forest Research following peer review. The version of record s available online at https://doi.org/10.1093/forestry/cpw015

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  • Open

Socio-economic Objectives

The media

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